Institute of Microbiology, Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany.
Department of Molecular and Applied Microbiology, Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology (HKI), Jena, Germany.
mBio. 2020 Apr 14;11(2):e00596-20. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00596-20.
Polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMNs) are indispensable for controlling life-threatening fungal infections. In addition to various effector mechanisms, PMNs also produce extracellular vesicles (EVs). Their contribution to antifungal defense has remained unexplored. We reveal that the clinically important human-pathogenic fungus triggers PMNs to release a distinct set of antifungal EVs (afEVs). Proteome analyses indicated that afEVs are enriched in antimicrobial proteins. The cargo and the release kinetics of EVs are modulated by the fungal strain confronted. Tracking of afEVs indicated that they associated with fungal cells and even entered fungal hyphae, resulting in alterations in the morphology of the fungal cell wall and dose-dependent antifungal effects. To assess as a proof of concept whether the antimicrobial proteins found in afEVs might contribute to growth inhibition of hyphae when present in the fungal cytoplasm, two human proteins enriched in afEVs, cathepsin G and azurocidin, were heterologously expressed in fungal hyphae. This led to reduced fungal growth relative to that of a control strain producing the human retinol binding protein 7. In conclusion, extracellular vesicles produced by neutrophils in response to infection are able to associate with the fungus, limit growth, and elicit cell damage by delivering antifungal cargo. This finding offers an intriguing, previously overlooked mechanism of antifungal defense against Invasive fungal infections caused by the mold are a growing concern in the clinic due to the increasing use of immunosuppressive therapies and increasing antifungal drug resistance. These infections result in high rates of mortality, as treatment and diagnostic options remain limited. In healthy individuals, neutrophilic granulocytes are critical for elimination of from the host; however, the exact extracellular mechanism of neutrophil-mediated antifungal activity remains unresolved. Here, we present a mode of antifungal defense employed by human neutrophils against not previously described. We found that extracellular vesicles produced by neutrophils in response to infection are able to associate with the fungus, limit growth, and elicit cell damage by delivering antifungal cargo. In the end, antifungal extracellular vesicle biology provides a significant step forward in our understanding of host pathogenesis and opens up novel diagnostic and therapeutic possibilities.
多形核粒细胞(PMN)对于控制危及生命的真菌感染是不可或缺的。除了各种效应机制外,PMN 还产生细胞外囊泡(EV)。它们对抗真菌防御的贡献尚未被探索。我们揭示了临床上重要的人类致病真菌 触发 PMN 释放一组独特的抗真菌 EV(afEV)。蛋白质组分析表明,afEV 富含抗菌蛋白。面临的真菌菌株调节 EV 的货物和释放动力学。afEV 的追踪表明,它们与真菌细胞结合,甚至进入真菌菌丝,导致真菌细胞壁形态发生改变,并具有剂量依赖性的抗真菌作用。为了评估概念验证,即当存在于真菌细胞质中时,afEV 中发现的抗菌蛋白是否可能有助于菌丝生长抑制,我们在真菌菌丝中异源表达了 afEV 中富含的两种人类蛋白,组织蛋白酶 G 和天青杀素。这导致与产生人类视黄醇结合蛋白 7 的对照菌株相比,真菌生长减少。总之,PMN 响应 感染产生的细胞外囊泡能够与真菌结合,通过输送抗真菌货物来限制生长并引发细胞损伤。这一发现提供了一种令人着迷的、以前被忽视的抗真菌防御机制,对抗 侵袭性真菌感染由霉菌引起,由于免疫抑制疗法的使用增加和抗真菌药物耐药性的增加,在临床上越来越受到关注。这些感染导致高死亡率,因为治疗和诊断选择仍然有限。在健康个体中,中性粒细胞对于从宿主中消除 至关重要;然而,中性粒细胞介导的抗真菌活性的确切细胞外机制仍未解决。在这里,我们提出了一种以前未描述的人类中性粒细胞对抗 的抗真菌防御模式。我们发现,PMN 响应 感染产生的细胞外囊泡能够与真菌结合,通过输送抗真菌货物来限制生长并引发细胞损伤。最终,抗真菌细胞外囊泡生物学在我们对 宿主发病机制的理解方面迈出了重要的一步,并开辟了新的诊断和治疗可能性。